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    Succession Rights Granted in Mitchell-Lama Co-op

    Affordable Housing  •  Williamsburg, Brooklyn
    Mitchell-Lama Co-op

    Image Credit: NYCourts.gov

    Downs syndrome grand-nephew sought succession rights to Mitchell-Lama cooperative apartment. On February 3, 2012, the permanent tenant of Lindsay Park Housing Corp., a Mitchell-Lama affordable housing cooperative, died. Following her death, the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development ruled that the grand-nephew, Haile King-Rubie, who resided with the deceased did not have succession rights to the apartment. Haile King-Rubie, who has Down syndrome, filed a petition to review this decision. (read more…)

    Tags : Appellate Division Second Department, CityLaw, Mitchell-Lama, The Department of Housing Preservation and Development
    Date:09/19/2016
    Category : Housing Preservation & Development
    (1) Comment

    Preservation Consultant Gregory Dietrich on a Unique Path to a Unique Career

    Gregory Dietrich
    Gregory Dietrich.

    Gregory Dietrich.

    Gregory Dietrich, Principal of Gregory Dietrich Preservation Consulting, works as one of the small number of privately practicing historic preservation consultants. His vocation brings him into close contact with regulatory bodies, developers, land use agencies, advocacy groups, non-profit organizations and more.  This gives him a unique perspective, and requires a wide range of expertise he continues to broaden.  In conversation, his intellectual versatility becomes readily apparent, as he discussed his work, his background, and his thoughts on development and preservation in the City.

    (read more…)

    Tags : CityLaw, CityLaw Profile, Gregory Dietrich, Landmarks Preservation Commission
    Date:09/02/2016
    Category : CityLaw
    (1) Comment

    Remembering Nicholas Scoppetta

    Commentary
    Ross Sandler

    Ross Sandler

    Nicholas Scoppetta, who passed away in March at age 83, represented the best in the City’s civic life. He often attended New York Law School events and was the featured speaker at a CityLaw Breakfast on September 12, 1997. At that time he headed the Administration for Children’s Services, and was deep in litigation with advocates for children who wanted the federal court to take over his agency. Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani had appointed Scoppetta in January 1996 following the November 1995 death of six-year-old Elisa Izquierdo. Elisa had been beaten to death by her mother, but the City was faulted because the City’s Child Welfare Administration possessed evidence that Elisa was endangered, and had failed to place the little girl into protective custody. In the public furor Mayor Giuliani assumed personal responsibility for children’s services, ordered the agency to report directly to him and appointed Nicholas Scoppetta to head the new agency.

    (read more…)

    Tags : Administration for Children's Services, CityLaw, Commissioner of Investigation, Fire Commissioner, Nicholas Scoppetta
    Date:05/18/2016
    Category : CityLaw
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    The Queens Midtown Tunnel is 75 years old!

    Ross Sandler

    Ross Sandler

    November 15, 2015 marked the 75th anniversary of the opening of the Queens Midtown Tunnel. The tunnel is an indispensable link between Manhattan and Queens, the Long Island Expressway, and JFK and LaGuardia airports. Its four lanes carry 80,000 vehicles a day. Few drivers in these 80,000 vehicles, however, were likely among those breaking open champagne bottles in celebration. Drivers are more concerned with getting in the tunnel, creeping through the tunnel, and getting out at the other end, at a toll of $8 per trip.

    (read more…)

    Tags : CityLaw, Commentary, Queens Midtown Tunnel, Ross Sandler
    Date:12/11/2015
    Category : Commentary
    (1) Comment

    CityLaw: Racial Disparity Persists in NYC’s Examination High Schools

    Aaron Saiger
    Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan. Image credit: CityLand

    Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan. Image credit: CityLand

    (Editor’s Note:  The Department of Education recently released statistics on the first round of 2015 admissions for New York City’s examination high schools.  According to their report, offers to join the 2015-2016 incoming class at Stuyvesant High School counts just ten African-American and twenty Latino students.  The following by Professor Aaron Saiger of Fordham University’s School of Law was published in the January/February issue of CityLaw.)

    New York City is experiencing one of its periodic flare-ups over its eight selective “examination” high schools. As in the past, attention has focused upon what a United Federation of Teachers task force calls “the profound inequity in the admissions demographics” at the exam schools. UFT, Redefining High Performance for Entrance into Specialized High Schools 3 (March 2014). This inequity results from these schools’ practice of admitting students based exclusively upon scores on the standardized Specialized High Schools Admissions Test. Because the exam schools now function as one component in the broader current system of citywide high school choice, however, it is possible to argue that their test-only admissions in fact enhance the diversity of the system overall, their racial demographics notwithstanding.

    (read more…)

    Tags : Bronx High School of Science, Brooklyn Tech, CityLaw, Department of Education, Hecht-Calendra, Mayor Bill de Blasio, Stuyvesant High School
    Date:03/10/2015
    Category : CityLaw
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    Two perspectives on Mayor John V. Lindsay at Hunter College

    Ross Sandler

     

    Ross Sandler

    Ross Sandler

    On Thursday, March 20, 2014, a lively audience filled the Kaye Playhouse at Hunter College to discuss Mayor John V. Lindsay. The occasion was the publishing of Summer in the City, John Lindsay, New York and the American Dream, edited by Hunter College Professor Joseph P. Viteritti. The audience came to hear two star-studded panels, the first moderated by Sam Roberts of the New York Times with Richard Ravitch, Lilliam Barrios-Paoli and Vincent Cannato. The second moderated by Errol Louis of NY1 and featuring former close Lindsay aides, Sid Davidoff, Ronnie Eldridge, Peter Goldmark and Jay Kriegel. The audience was not disappointed. (read more…)

    Tags : CityLaw, Commentary, Ross Sandler
    Date:03/31/2014
    Category : Commentary
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